The actor is apparently about to blow our minds with the new Mission: Impossible 6 as he’s reportedly upped the ante with his stunts and is about to embark on the most ‘unbelievable’ one ever.

As if he hasn’t done enough batshit-crazy stuff in his movies – he’s hung off the side of a flying plane, dangled by his foot from the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, and survived that incredible bike chase in M:I 2, but now he’s planning on outdoing himself.

Hanging off the side of a plane wasn’t high-octane enough

Because there’s no fun in movie making if you’re not risking your life, eh Tom?

According to Collider, whatever the devil he’s up to has taken him an entire year to prepare for, so already we know it’s going to be huge. The stunt is even crossing continents, as it’s reportedly being filmed in Paris, London and New Zealand as of April 10.

Tom just getting some air (Picture: Rex)

Skydance Media CEO David Ellison told Collider it’s going to blow all his other stunts out of the water: ‘I will say after the Burj [Khalifa] we thought it was going to be impossible to top that stunt, and then Tom did the A380 for the plane. What Tom is doing in this movie I believe will top anything that’s come before.

‘It is absolutely unbelievable—he’s been training for a year. It is going to be, I believe, the most impressive and unbelievable thing that Tom Cruise has done in a movie, and he has been working on it since right after Rogue Nation came out.

And, wait for it…’It’s gonna be mind-blowing.’

Now there’s just the matter of the wait until July 2018 to find out what the heck it is.

Tom has always been a huge fan of doing things himself, and Ellison added it’s because: ‘In a world of massive [visual] effects, he said the audience can tell when it’s you on a green screen or when you’re actually doing it live.

‘And the tension, because the stunt is real, actually puts the audience where Ethan Hunt is where they are in the movie. He said that’s why he does it; it’s all about entertaining an audience and it makes the movie better.’